Thoughts on MICRODEM, computer mapping, a fall semester in Rabat, birds, and retirement travels in Venice
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Saturday, November 28, 2020
The spotter
Birds require a spotter, and someone to help hold things for changing lenses. This was a dark and overcast day, and I had the third string (least telephoto) lens to try to compensate. The dense foliage, while not hampering vision too much, makes it hard to focus and see the bird through the trees.
Thursday, November 26, 2020
Look and feel of the map
I grew up hiking in the Great Basin with the old 1:62K topo sheets, and when the 1:24K sheets came out, they had a much different look. Now the newer 1:24K sheets have an even different look. Our Verteran's Day "tradition" is to go hiking at Shenandoah. Last year it snowed as we came back, but this year it only rained.
The USGS topo maps are free to download, and I got both the 2019 editions and the 1994 version. They look different (the new pictogram symbols just don't seem like a topo map, more the NPS brochure), and I had both on my phone for our hike around Big Meadows to see Lewis Spring Falls and then the disappointing Tanners Ridge Cemetery, which is not historic but very much a typical cemetery. The big omission on the current map are the buildings, which are some of the key landmarks for navigating, and picking the right trail.
The hiking was the day before the rain, but it was cloudy and the photography disappointing.
Herons with the fall colors
I've been taking the B team bird lens lately, since it's much lighter and easier to carry. It does not get as close to the birds, but sometimes the wider view catchs more of the fall colors.
Digging in for the winter
Our crafty goundhog is gathering leaves, and taking them under the shed. His actions are in the shade, behind a stick piles and the raspberry bushes. Banging on the shed does not seem to bother him.
Sunday, November 1, 2020
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